By Jennifer Kim | April 13, 2026
On this day, April 13, 2026, Ethereum (ETH) stands as the undisputed leader of the smart contract platform wars, with its market capitalization firmly established above $500 billion. The turning point for ETH occurred nearly two years ago, on May 23, 2024, when the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) unexpectedly approved the 19b-4 filings for eight spot Ethereum ETFs. This historic move, which included industry titans like BlackRock, Fidelity, and Grayscale, signaled a profound shift in the regulatory landscape and opened the floodgates for institutional capital that was previously sidelined.
The “No-Staking” Compromise: Two Years Later
A defining feature of the 2024 ETF approval was the SEC’s requirement that issuers exclude staking from their offerings. At the time, this was seen as a significant concession, as investors in these ETFs would miss out on the 3-4% annual yield generated by the network’s consensus mechanism. However, as we look back from 2026, this “no-staking” legacy has had a curious effect. Rather than dampening demand, it created a bifurcated market: institutional investors use the ETF for pure price exposure and “clean” collateral, while native crypto-users and sophisticated funds continue to hold spot ETH directly to capture staking and restaking rewards. This has prevented a massive centralization of staking power in the hands of a few ETF issuers, a concern that plagued the community in early 2024.
Price Performance and Market Absorption
Following the 2024 approval, ETH saw an immediate 25% surge, adding over $90 billion to its market cap in days. While the initial “sell the news” event saw prices consolidate around the $3,800 level, the long-term absorption of ETH by ETF issuers has been relentless. Analysts initially projected $15 billion in first-year inflows; actual data shows that cumulative inflows reached $22 billion by the end of 2025. This steady bid has provided a floor for ETH price action, allowing it to outperform most of the “Ethereum Killer” L1s over the past 24 months. As of today, ETH is trading at $2,350, reflecting its status as the world’s most utilized blockchain.
Institutional DeFi and the FIT21 Catalyst
The success of the ETH ETF was bolstered by the passage of the FIT21 Act in May 2024, which provided the first comprehensive regulatory framework for digital assets in the United States. This legislation allowed institutional DeFi (Insti-DeFi) to flourish. Today, in 2026, we see major banks issuing tokenized commercial paper on Ethereum-based Layer 2s, utilizing the mainnet for settlement. The “clean” regulatory status of ETH has made it the preferred asset for these high-value applications, further driving demand for the underlying token as “gas” for the global financial machine.
Ethereum’s Dominance in the L2 Era
The post-Dencun upgrade (EIP-4844) era has seen Ethereum L2 fees remain consistently below $0.01, effectively ending the fee-war with competitors like Solana. While Solana continues to lead in specific high-throughput use cases, Ethereum’s role as the “L1 for L2s” is now solidified. The combined TVL of Arbitrum, Optimism, and Base has surpassed $60 billion, with a significant portion of that liquidity coming from institutional players who entered the space via the 2024 ETF launch. Ethereum has successfully transitioned from a high-fee playground for “degens” to a low-cost, secure foundation for the internet of value.
Related: Ethereum Surges 6% as Harvard University Increases ETH Exposure | Grayscale Declares 2026 the ‘Institutional Era’ for Decentralized Lending | Institutional Bitcoin Inflows Hit Record 62.8 Billion as Spot ETFs Enter New Boom Phase
Disclaimer: Cryptocurrency investments are subject to high market volatility and significant risk. The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always conduct your own research before investing.
The “no-staking” compromise turned out to be the best thing that could have happened. Kept staking decentralized while giving institutions their clean price exposure.
Smart money always finds a way. ETF for clean collateral, direct holding for staking yield. The 3-4% annual yield is too significant for sophisticated funds to ignore.
25% surge on the ETF approval was just the start. the bifurcated market thesis playing out exactly as described here
$500B market cap and some people still call eth a security lol. blackrock and fidelity literally have ETFs for it